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Borderline Personality Disorder Today MENU
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Story #31
I was about nine years old -- my uncle had shot his wife, and
my mom had just received the call saying he was arrested. I
remember standing there looking at her and my father, as she
cried. They wouldn't talk to me, and soon I was taken to a
cousin's house to get out of the way. I thought I had done
something terrible, so awful that they wouldn't even tell me. No
one would tell me anything.
I was about ten years old -- my maternal grandmother was dying of
cancer. I was taken to my grandparents' house every night as my
mother held a bedside vigil. I remember a lot of family members
sitting around. I was called back to my grandma's bedroom. I stood
by her bed, and didn't say anything, not even a wish for her to
get better. She soon died. After the funeral, my mother had the
family over to our house. All I can recall is playing. So much
sadness, and I just remember having fun.
I was about eleven years old -- my sister and I received a call
from my maternal grandfather's neighbor. Since my grandmother had
died, his neighbors looked for the living room curtains to open as
a sign that he was OK. This day, the curtains weren't open. He was
supposed to be going to the mountains for the weekend, so we
assumed he had just left without opening them. We drove out
though, and walked through the house and didn't see anything
unusual. As we were getting ready to leave, the neighbor asked if we
checked the bathroom. My sister told me to run in and look. That's
where I found my dead grandfather. I ran out and hid across the
street, watching from a tree as my mother came from work crying,
the police arrived, and the hearse pulled up. If I hadn't found
him, maybe he wouldn't have been dead?
These three events were long forgotten to me until a couple of
years ago. I'm currently 28, and have been cutting since I was 15.
I have been in and out of mental wards since I was 14, mainly for
depression and suicide attempts (some of which were just cutting
marks that my parents found). I was diagnosed early on with
Bipolar Disorder. In 1998, I became obsessed with hurting myself
to the point of cutting two or three times a day at work, and
admitted myself into an excellent hospital I had heard of. After a
week-long inpatient stay to calm myself down, I started three
weeks of the hospital's day-patient program. It was here that I
was diagnosed with BPD. I had never even known other people cut
themselves, let alone it was a disorder trait.
The diagnosis to me was a blessing and a curse. I finally was able
to stand back and see myself -- my behavior, my actions -- and
understand what the underlying factors are in me. I learned that
because of the three events mentioned above, I developed a huge
amount of guilt and indebtedness aimed towards my mother, which to
this day causes me to hold in any ill feelings towards her and
manifests itself in my cutting. I learned that I had been using
suicide during my teen years as a tool to become more popular and
more loved by my peers. And I learned that if I stop before I cut,
and try to define what moment triggered my self-esteem to fall to
such depths that I would want to hurt myself, I usually won't cut.
However, I also became much more self-conscious of who I open up
to. I now constantly asking myself whether I'm trying to be open
and honest with a friend, or if I'm trying to manipulate that
person into feeling a certain way about me. I've lost a few
friends because of "problem dumping," so I'm not too
eager to tell people I have BPD and that I cut and as a
result, I don't have much of a support system.
I did go out on a limb, recently. I saw a press release for the
USA Network movie "Secret Cutting" shown on May 30. I
e-mailed it to four friends of mine who know I cut with hopes that
they would watch it for more of an understanding about what I go
through. None of them watched it. One friend even responded with
an "Ewww!!" It's still a secret that no one wants to
talk about. I didn't cut myself this past week because of anything
I saw in the movie (I just cried a lot during it) - I cut myself
this week because the friends I'm closest to think what I do is so
unspeakable.
I'm currently not seeing a therapist, though I should be just for
someone to talk to. I was scared away from therapy when I admitted
myself to the hospital in 1998. First, I saw my therapist that
morning and he didn't think I should be admitted -- he thought
that I could work through it on my own. Then, after my month's
stay, I came back to him saying that I wanted to see a female
therapist because my therapist in the hospital was a woman and I
felt like I could talk to her more openly. She had even
recommended one of the doctors at the hospital for me to see.
Instead of embracing this as a step towards healing, he saw this
as an issue I needed to work through and refused to pursue it. It
was at that time that I stopped seeing a therapist, when I
realized that any independent thought I had could be seen as
"an issue." I moved to Florida soon afterwards to
distance myself from my mother, and haven't sought out
professional help in the year and a half I've been here.
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